I want the TRUTH!

6 views
Skip to first unread message

art

unread,
Mar 16, 2014, 12:22:50 PM3/16/14
to neuendorffe...@googlegroups.com
nordicskiv2 wrote:

<<We live in a world that has loads of chance anagrams and
equidistant letter sequences in texts written by ordinary men,
anagrams and equidistant letter sequences that are unintentional
and utterly meaningless. Please tell me that you have something
more, Art. Please tell me that you haven't pinned your hopes
to crackpot cryptography and nutcase numerology.>>

Did the Grand Master issue a Code Rosicross on me?
(I want the TRUTH!)
---------------------------------------------------------
nordicskiv2 wrote:

> I would suggest that you pick up a fool
> and start posting authorship evidence,
---------------------------------------------------------
http://www.shakespearefellowship.org/etexts/si/05.htm
http://www.theotherpages.org/poems/vere01.html
.
. Who would not scorn, and *SHAKE them from the FIST* ,
. And let them fly, fair *FOOLs* , which way they list?
. Yet for disport we fawn and flatter both,
. To pass the time when nothing else can please;
. And train them to our lure with subtle oath
. Till, weary of their wiles, ourselves we ease;
. And then we say, when we their fancy try,
.
. *To play with FOOLs, oh, what a FOOL was I* !
.
.     - [Lo. O]x[F]ord Edward De Vere
---------------------------------------------------
.      "(To the m)emory of my beloved "
.       (To the m)[-eMOry of my beloVED]
.       (To them) [my OM, by fo(DEVere)ol-]
.      " To them, my OM, by fo(DEVere)ol- "
-----------------------------------------------------------------
"Item juratores presentant super sacramentum suum quod Humfridius
Reynoldes xijd. Adrianus Quiney xijd. et Johannes Shakyspere xijd.
fecerunt *sterqui-NAR-ium* in vico vocato Hendley Strete contra
ordinacionem curie; ideo *IPSI* in misericordia, ut patet."
.............................................................
___    "O, I smell false Latin"

So far as I can tell NO ONE uses *sterqui-NAR-ium*
OTHER than with reference to Johannes Shakyspere.

The *proper* Latin term is *sterqui-LIN-ium* !!!
.................................................
Apparently Oxford's (backwards) *NIL*
has been replaced with Stratford's *NAR*
.................................
*sterqui-LIN-ium*
*sterqui-NAR-ium*
........................................................
*NAR* : fool, jester, coxcomb (Danish, Dutch, Yiddish)
*NARR* : goop, jester, zany (German, Swedish)
*NARRE* : delude, dupe, frame (Norwegian)
*NARREN* : dupe, hoax, jesters, make a fool of,
.            mystify, to hoax, trick (German)
---------------------------------------------------
http://home.att.net/~tleary/GIFS/MINERVA.GIF

_The MINERVA BRITANNA_ Banner Folding clearly demonstrates
how the Equidistant Linear Sequence decoding is to be performed:
............................................................
http://f01.middlebury.edu/FS010A/students/Minerva/title.jpg
.
.             [V]I      __\V\ (I)\T\ U R
.             [I]N G     __\E\  \N\I\ O
.             [C]Æ|T| E     \R\  \A\M\
.             [O]R|T| I S  __\E\  \R\
.             [U N T]
.
"all thinges perish and come to theyr last end, but workes
of learned WITS and monuments of Poetry abide *for EUER* ."
..........................................................
.    "MIT NAR" is old Dutch for "WITH FOOL"
.    (i.e., Edward de VERE "WITH SHAKSPER")
----------------------------------------------------------
1577 Dedication in John Brooke's The Staff of Christian Faith.

.  To the Right honourable and his singular good Lorde
.  and maister Edwarde de \VERE\, Lorde d'Escales, and
.  Badlesinere, [VICOUNT] Bulbecke, Earle of Oxenforde,
.  and Lorde great Chamberlayne of Englande,
.  Iohn Brooke wisheth long lyfe,
.  with the increase of honor.&c.

ALTHOUGH VER(tu)E the roote of well doing (Right honorable Lorde) hath
of it selfe, sufficient force to withstande, repell, and ouerthrowe,
both the open m{ALICE}, and secrete slaunders of euill tongues, yet
notwithstanding considering howe dangerous, yea howe vnpossible a
thing it is to escape that poysoned sting of Zoilus, and also that
nothing hath eue[R] ben s[O] well [D]one, b[U]t tha[T] this Scorpion
hath eyther openly or priuily stong, I nede not to doubt, nay I may
be right sure, that these my labors shal come into the hands of
some, more curious than *WYSE* , more ready to nippe and tant
(yea euen withoute fault) then frendly to admonsihe or amende.

{ALICE}  1
[TUDOR] -5
............................................................
1579: Dedication to Oxford in the only edition of
   Geoffrey Gates' The Defence of Militarie profession.

.   TO THE RIGHT honorable, Edward de \VERE\, Earle of
.   Oxenford, [VICOUNT] Bulbecke, Lod of Escales
.   and Baldesmere, and Lord great Chamberlaine of England.

. The experience of troublesome furies of men founded Armes, and
aduanuced Militarie profession, for the repressing and restraining
of the tyrannes and noyfull m{ALICE} of the wicked. The experience
of the profit and value of lawe and armes, maketh al prudent states
and commonwelths, to embrace and to vphold them both with much care
and endeuour. So to conclude, experience is the ordinarie companion
and naturall ornament of reason, which maketh men wise in knowledge,
& prudent in the direction and vse of things. He therefore
that iudgeth or directeth against experience, i(S) not
in deede a man, but *A FOOLE MORE ign(O)rant THAN A BEAST* .
The experience of o(T)her mens harmes, warneth the *WISE*
to b(E)ware. The experience of forren euill(S), warneth England
to waken it selfe ou(T) of securitie, and to be watchfull,
and *WISEly* to take it selfe. Experience hath taug[H]t me
[T]o lo[U]e an[D] to h[O]nou[R] armes, and in the zeale of good heart
to couet the aduancement of martial occupation, which made me (an
vnletter man) to take vnto me a notarie to sette downe in writing
this drift in the defence and praise of warlike prowesse, against
al contemners of the same: for the benefite and encouragement of
my countrie & countrimen. And finally, the experience of the high
noblenes & honour of you, my singular good Lord, doth enbolden me (in
the loue of a faithful hart, to your renoumed VER(tu)Es) most humbly
to commend this litle work to your honorable protection, that vnder
the shielde of your noble favour and iudgement, it may stande in grace
before our nation, to some good effect. God graunt it. To whom be
praise, & to your good Lordhippe, abundaunce of heauenly graces,
and fatherly blessings, euen to *EUERlasting* life.

Amen. London. 23 Decemb. 1578,

{ALICE}     1
[H. TUDOR]  4
(SO TEST)  31

----------------------------------------------------------
Sweet swan of A{V}on! what a sight it w{E}re
To see thee in ou{R} waters yet app{E}are,
.......................................
{VERE} 16 : Prob. at end ~ 2 in 43
.......................................
And make those flights upon the bankes of Tha[M]es,
That so did t[A]ke Eliza, and ou[R] James !
B{U}t stay, [I] se{E} thee in th{E} [He]misphe{R}e
Advanc'd, and made a Constellation there !
.......................................
_______  <= 13 =>
.
.  A n d m a k e t h o s  e f
.  l i g h t s u p o n t  h e
.  b a n k e s o f T h a [M]e
.  s T h a t s o d i d t [A]k
.  e E l i z a a n d o u [R]J
.  a m e s B{U}t s t a y [I]s
.  e{E}t h e e i n t h{E}[H e]
.  m i s p h e{R}e A d v  a n
.  c'd,a n d m a d e a C  o n
.  s t e l l a t i o n t  h e r e !
................................................
{UEER}        9
[MARI.H(e.)] 13 : Prob. at end ~ 1 in 2525

Mary Sidney Herbert --- Newly drawn?
The swans on the collar look suspiciously prominent.
http://tinyurl.com/k2m72rc
---------------------------------------------------
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bible_code#Equidistant_Letter_Sequence_method
........................
MI(c)AH 6:7
.
Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rammes,
 with tenne thousands of riuers of oyle?
 Shall I giue my first borne for
[M]y tr[A]nsg[R]ess[I]on, t[He] fruit
 of my body the sinne of my soule?
........................
.  <= 4 =>
.
. [M] y t r
. [A] n s g
. [R] e s s
. [I] o n,t
. [H e] f r
.  u  i t o
.  f  m y b
.  o  d y
.
[MARI.H(e.)] 4
........................
The smallest skip (of only about seven of skip < 18)
for Equidistant Letter Sequence: [MARI.H(e.)]
---------------------------------------------------
(S)hine *FORTH* , thou StarrE Of Poets, and wi[T]h rage,
(O)r inf[L]uence, chide, [O]r cheere the [D]rooping Sta[G]e;
(W)hich, sinc[E] thy flight fro' hence, hath mourn'd li{K(e)NIGHT},
.And despaires day, but for thy Volumes light.
...................................................................
_____  <= 11 =>
.
. S h i n e f o r t h, t
. h o u S t a r r E O  f
. P o e t s,a n d w i [T]
. h r a g e,O r i n f [L]
. u{E}n c e,c h i d e,[O]
. r{C}h e e r e t h e [D]
. r{O}o p i n g S t a [G]
. e;W h i c h,s i n c [E]
. t h y f l i g h t f  r
. o'h e n c e,h a t h  m
. o u r n'd l i{K(e)N  I
. G H T}A n d d e s p  a
. i r e s d a y,b u t  f
. o r t h y V o l u m  e
. s l i g h t.
....................................
{E.C.O.}  11
[T.LODGE] 11 : Prob. ~ 1 in 17,850
.........................................................
My Shakespeare, *RISE* ; I will no[T.LODGE] thee
 by Chaucer, or Spenser, or bid Beaumont lye
--------------------------------------------------------
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bible_code#Equidistant_Letter_Sequence_method
........................
In KJV the word "LODGE" occurs 50 times
but only 3 times preceeded by the letter "T."
....................................................
JOB 31:32 The *STRANGER* did no[T LODGE] in the street:
       but I opened my doores to the trauailer.

NEHEMIAH 4:22 Let *EVERy* one
    with his seruan[T LODGE] within Ierusalem,

2 SAMUEL 17:8 thy father a man of warre,
      and will no[T.LODGE] with the people.
....................................................
In KJV [T.LODGE] occurs only once with a +skip less than 50:

Psalms 18:12  At the brightness
 [T]hat was before him his thick c[L]ouds passed,
 hail stones and c[O]als of fire. The LORD also
 thun[D]ered in the heavens, and the Hi[G]hest
 gave his voice; hail ston[E]s and coals of fire.
....................................................
.                   <= 25 =>
.
. A t t h e b r i g h t n e s s [T] h a t w a s b e f
. o r e h i m h i s t h i c k c [L] o u d s p a s s e
. d,h a i l s t o n e s a n d c [O] a l s o f f i r e.
. T h e L O R D a l s o t h u n [D] e r e d i n t h e
. h e a v e n s,a n d t h e H i [G] h e s t g a v e h
. i s v o i c e;h a i l s t o n [E] s a n d c o a l s
. o f f i r e.
---------------------------------------------------
[M]r. William S(H)AK<ES>P(E|A|R}ES
Comedi(E)s, H{I}st(O|R|I|E}s & T{R}ag{E}d(I|E}s,
<P|U}b(L|I|S)h{E}d accor(D)ing to t[He] Tr{U}e Orig(I)nall Co<PIES>
...............................................
_________  <= 17 =>

.  [M]R.W i l l i a m S (H) A K <E S> P(E)
.  [A|R}E S C o m e d i (E) s,H <I> s t(O)
.  [R|I|E}s&T{R}a g{E}d (I){E}s <P>{U}b(L)
.  [I|S)h{E}d a c c o r (D) i n  g  t o t
.  [H e}T r{U}e O r i g (I) n a  l  l C o
.  <P I E S>.
..........................................
[MARI.H(e.)]  17 : Prob. ~ 1 in 4174
{UEER}    -3,-18 : Prob. ~ 1 in  136
..................................................
THE LA. [MARI]e (He)r(be)rt COUNTESSE OF PEMBROOKE.
----------------------------------------------------
_________       <= 17 =>

. T O T H E {O}N (L) I E B E  G  E  T T{E}
. R O F T H {E}S (E) I N S V  I  N  G S{O}
. N N E T S [M]R (W) H A L L {H} A  P P I
. N E S S E [A]N (D) T H A T {E} T {E}R N
. I T I E P [R]O  M  I S E D {B}(Y){O}V R
. E V E R L [I]V  I  N G P O {E}(T){W}I S
. H E T H T [H e] W  E L L W  I (S){H}I N
. G A D V{E} N T  V  R E R I  N  S  E T T
. I N G F{O} R T  H  T T
..........................................
[MARI.H(e.)] 17 : Prob. ~ 1 in 10,000
..........................................
Burghley to Walsingham, May 13, 1597:
"(LEWD) friends...still rule [Oxford] by flatteries."
-------------------------------------------------------
.              Act II, scene IV
.
ROSALIND: Well, this is *the forest of ARDEN* .
.
TOUCHSTONE: Ay, now am I in *ARDEN* ; the *MORE FOOL I* ;
.  *when I was at home* , I was in a better place:
.   but travellers must be content.
-------------------------------------------------
*NAR* : FOOL, jester, coxcomb (Danish, Dutch, Yiddish)
.........................................................
_____  *VERE : ARDEN*
_____  *DE VERE: NAR*
_____  *NEVER READ*
--------------------------------------------------------
.  _The Man without a Country_  by EDWARD E.VERE-TT HALE
.
That story shows about the time when NOLAN's braggadocio must
have broken down. At first, they said, he took a VERy high tone,
considered his imprisonment a mere farce, affected to enjoy
the voyage, and all that; but Phillips said that after he
came out of his state-room he nEVER was the same man again.
He *NEVER READ* aloud again, unless it was the Bible
or *SHAKESPEARE* , or something else he was sure of.

But it was not that merely.

He nEVER entered in with the other young men exactly
as a *COMPANION* again. He was always shy afterwards,
when I knew him, VERy seldom spoke, unless
he was spoken to, except to a VERy few friends.
-----------------------------------------------------
.   The Taming of the Shrew  Act 3, Scene 1
.
LUCENTIO: Preposterous ass, that *NEVER READ* so far
.   To know the cause why music was ordain'd!
.   Was it not to refresh the mind of man
.   After his studies or his usual pain?
-----------------------------------------------------
ThoMAS Shelton's  _The History of the Valorous
& Witty KNIGHT-Errant Don Quixote of the Mancha
.
The Second Part CHAPTER LXXIV: How Don Quixote fell Sick;
.    of the Will he made, and of his Death
.
The notary was present at his death, and reporteth
how he had *NEVER READ* or found in any book of chivalry
that any errant kNIGHT died in his bed so mildly,
so quietly, and so Christianly as did Don Quixote.
--------------------------------------------------------
_Bibliography of the Bacon-Shakespeare Controversy,
with Notes and Extracts_  -By William Henry Wyman (1884)
.
.          Who Wrote Shakespeare?
An article in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, August 7, 1852
.
<<The earliest expression of doubt as to the authorship
of Shakespeares plays is found in _High Life Below Stairs_
, a farce written by the rEVEREnD James Townley (1715-1778)
and first acted in DRURY LANE in 1759. The dramatis personae
in the dialogue are holding high carnival in the absence
of the owners of the mansion, all, except Kitty, assuming
the titles of their respective masters & mistresses
....................................................
.     High Life below Stairs. Act ii. Sc. 1.
.
LADY BAB:     I got into my favourite author

DUKE:  Yes, I found her ladyship at her studies this morning.
.           -Some *WICKED* poem.
.
LADY BAB: Oh, you wretch! *I NEVER READ* but one book.
.
KITTY:   What is it that your ladyship is so fond of?
.
LADY BAB:  Shikspur. Did you *NEVER READ* Shikspur ?
.
SIR HARRY:  *I NEVER (h)EARD* of it.
.
KITTY:  Shikspur? Shikspur? Who wrote it?
.         No, *I NEVER READ* Shikspur!
.
LADY BAB:   Then you have an immense pleasure to come.
.
KITTY: Well, then, I'll read it OVER one afternoon or other.>>
--------------------------------------------------------
.  [ON *POET-APE* ]  EPIGRAMS   by Ben Jonson
.
Poor *POET-APE* , that would be thought our chief,
.    Whose works are e'en the frippery of wit,
[F]rom brokage is become so bold a thief,
.    As we, the robb'd, leave rage, and pity it.
[A]t first he made low shifts, would pick and glean,
.    Buy the rEVERsion of old plays ;  now grown
[T]o a little wealth, and credit in the scene,
.    He takes up all, makes each man's wit his own :
[A]nd, told of this, he slights it.  Tut, such crimes
.    The sluggish gaping auditor devours ;
. He marks not whose 'twas first : and after-times
.    May judge it to be his, as well as ours.
. *FOOL* !  as if half eyes will not know a fleece
. [F]rom locks of w[OOL], or shreds from the whole piece ?
---------------------------------------------
____  Twelfth Night  Act 5, Scene 1
.
.  When that I was and a little tiny boy,
.  With hey, ho, *the WIND and the RAIN* ,
.  A *FOOLish* thing was *BUT A TOY* ,
.  For the rain it raineth *EVERY DAY* .
---------------------------------------------
A Lover's Complaint
(Published in 1609 with "Sonnets")
.
{F}rom off a hill whose concave womb re-worded
{A} plaintful story from a sistering vale,
{M}y spirits to attend this double voice accorded,
{A}nd down I laid to list the sad-tuned tale;
[E]re long espied a fickle maid full pale,
[T]earing of papers, breaking rings a-twain,
[S]torming her world with sorrow's *WIND and RAIN* .
---------------------------------------------
> Neufer wrote:
>>
>> Rosicrucian = Rosencrantz
>> Freemason = Guildenstern

Dwebb wrote:
>
>  Huh?  There is no indication whateVER in the play that
> Rosencrantz is a Rosicrucian, or that Guildenstern is a Freemason.

There certainly was in Oxford's _Hamlet_ first Quarto (1603):
----------------------------------------------------------------
In _Hamlet_ the Hermetic side is represented by Rosencrantz
.....................................................
Many Elizabethans (e.g., Edward Dyer,
Francis Bacon, John Dee & maybe William Strange)
were Rosicrucians    {Rosencrantz => Rosenkreutz}
.
In Folio's 2,3, & 4  Rosencrantz was ROSINCROSS
.
[In the first Quarto ROSINCROSS is Rossen(CRAFT)!]
-------------------------------------------------------
The Masonic side is represented by Guildenstern
.....................................................
.   Thomas Sackville, Lord Buckhurst, (1536-1608) was
the English dramatist that paved the way for Shakespeare.
.   Sackville was Grandmaster Freemason (1561-1567)
.    {Freemason => Stone Guild => Guildensteen}

[In first Quarto (1603) Guildenstern was GILDERSTONE]
---------------------------------------------------------
.   .       Rosicrucians.   .     Freemasons
.   .       Rosy Cross[the Craft] Stone Guild
.................................................
.   Q1.    *ROSsenCRAFT*.   .   *GuilderSTONE*
.   Q2.     ROSencrans.   .      Guyldensterne
.   F1.     ROSincrane.   .      Guildensterne
.   F2,3,4 *ROSinCROSSe* .   .   Guildenstare
-------------------------------------------------------
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosicrucianism
.
<<Between 1607 & 1616, two anonymous manifestos were published, first in
Germany & later throughout Europe. These were the {FAMA} Fraternitatis RC
(The Fame of the Brotherhood of RC) and the Confessio Fraternitatis (The
Confession of the Brotherhood of RC). The {FAMA} Fraternitatis presented
the legend of a German doctor & mystic philosopher referred to as "Frater
C.R.C." The influence of these documents, presenting a "most laudable Order"
of mystic-philosopher-doctors and promoting a "Universal Reformation of
Mankind", gave rise to an enthusiasm called the "Rosicrucian Enlightenment".
Rosicrucianism was associated with Protestantism, and the manifestos
opposed Roman Catholicism and its preference for dogma over empiricism.
They traced their philosophy & science to the Moors, asserting that
it had been kept secret for 120 years until the intellectual climate
might receive it. The idea of such an order, exemplified by the network
of astronomers, professors, mathematicians, and natural philosophers
in 16th-century Europe and promoted by men such as Johannes Kepler,
Georg Joachim Rheticus, John Dee and Tycho Brahe, gave rise to
the Invisible College. This was a precursor
to the Royal Society which was founded in 1660.>>
------------------------------------------------------------
Dwebb wrote:
>
> neither Rosencrantz nor Guildenstern is an especially sympathetic
> character (both are stooges of Claudius), and both men come to
> a bad end -- hardly what one would expect of the way a Masonic/
> Rosicrucian conspiracy would represent members of either order.

The author of _Hamlet_ first Quarto (1603)

got his little literary revenge upon those who were to
erase his name from his works before publishing them.
--------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.rosicrucian-order.com/principal.htm
--------------------------------------------------------------
THE CREST OF *JOHANN VALENTIN ANDREÆ*.
http://www.sacred-texts.com/eso/sta/img/14000.jpg
....................................................
<<The reference to four red roses & a white cross in
the Chymical Marriage of Christian [ROSENKR]eutz identified
Johann Valentin Andreæ as its author, for his family crest,
shown above, consisted of four red roses & a white cross.>>
........................................................
__    \_*_/
__    _\_/
__  * - X  *  Edward de Vere, Erle of Oxenford was buryed
__    _/_\      __________ the 6th daye of Julye Å 1604
__   _/ *_\     ____________  [ *St. Godelieve's day* ]
.
<<The strange, large 'X' type symbol appears to have been put there
much later. According to Paul Altrocchi, this must have happened a
many decades later "...since pencils with such a sharp point did
not appear until the late 1600's."  It really is anybody's guess
who put it there - perhaps an over-enthusiastic Oxfordian?>>
.
- _The Death of Edward de Vere_ by Michael Llewellyn
...........................................................
1604          WHITgift dies on February 29th.
1604       1000th anniversary of St.Augustine's death.
1604        Tomb of Christian Rosenkreutz discovered.
1604                Hamlet (Q2) published
1604          {FAMA} Fraternitatis published
1604   Tragical History of Doctor Faustus (V1) published
1604      Oxford dies on the Feastday of John the Baptist.
1604                 Kepler's NOVA/AVON.
1604 Susan marries Pembroke on the Feastday of John the Devine
...........................................................
1616  *JOHANN VALENTIN ANDREÆ's* Rosicrucian manifesto:
. _The Chemical Wedding of Christian *ROSEN-KREUZ* 1459_
.
1616       Shakespeare wills Anne second best bed.
1616    Cervantes & Shakespeare die on St.George's Day.
1616    1000th anniversary of Ethelbert(/bard?)'s death.
1616         Jupiter returns the "Serpent's foot"
1616   Tragical History of Doctor Faustus (V2) published
-----------------------------------------------------------
Goethe's poem :"The Mysteries," in which Brother Mark
is guided to the Temple where the Rose Cross is on the door.
--------------------------------------------------------
J.W. von Goethe: _Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship_
.         Book II  Chapter X
.
WHEN our friends began to think of going home, they looked about them
for their clergyman; but he had vanished, and was nowhere to be found.
  .
'It is not polite in the man, who otherwise displayed
good breeding,' said Madam Melina, 'to desert a company
that welcomed him so kindly, without taking leave.'
'I have all the time been thinking,' said Laertes,
'where I can have seen this singular man before.
I fully intended to ask him about it at parting.'
'I too had the same feeling,' said Wilhelm, 'and certainly
I should not have let him go, till he had told us something
more about his circumstances. I am much mistaken
if I have not ere now spoken with him somewhere.'
'And you may in truth,' said Philina, 'be mistaken there.
This person seems to have the air of an acquaintance,
because he looks like a man, and not like *JACK or KIT* '
'What is this?' said Laertes. 'Do not we two look like men?'
'I know what I am saying,? cried Philina;
'and if you cannot understand me, nEVER mind. In the end
my words will be found to require no commentary.'
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Aubrey's _Antiquities_ (1656): published on Oxford's 106th birthday.

The Dugdale drawing was published in 1656 - Oxford's 106th birthday!

_  Shakespeare(106 yrs) => Oxford(54 yrs) + Shakspere(52 yrs)

St. Anthony the Great (251-356) died at the age of 106 years
------------------------------------------------------------------
     Osiris was chopped up into 14 pieces.
________          A Sonnet has 14 lines.
      Shakespeare published his 14 x 11 Sonnets
_____________________          14 years before the First Folio.
.............................................................
__________             *1484 = 14 x 106*
-------------------------------------------------------------------
<<In *1484* , when (ROSICRUCIAN founder) Christian ROSENCREUTZ
died at the age of *106* years, he was buried in secrecy..(however)
a secret burial chamber was discovered with the engraved word's
'POST CXX ANNOS PATEBO' - 'after *120* years I will appear'.>>
.............................................................
_____________      *1484 + 120 = 1604*
.............................................................
_      The sixth rule of the Rosicrucians,
_  as laid down in the *{FAMA} FRATernitatis* of 1614
_     *demanded anonymity for one hundred years*
.............................................................
<<Gnostic device: "Learn to know all but keep thyself unknown">>
------------------------------------------------------------------
                *ARRÊTÉ : STOPPED*  (French)
-------------------------------------------------------------
   http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~lgboyd/chapter5.htm

<<The de VERES were an ancient dynastic family seated at their ancestral
   village of VER (from which they took their name), near Bayeaux and
the River VIRE, in MANCHE on the NORMANdy coast of present-day northern
France. The name of the town itself came from the "VER," a Norse word
  meaning *FISHDAM* that the Vikings had introduced into NORMANdy,
and etymologically akin to the Old English word *WEIR* meaning
  a *FISHDAM* , and originally spelled both "Wier" & "Wear" .>>
---------------------------------------------------------------
_   SUFFLA __  M _I ____ N  __    AND   U   ____ S ERAT
............................................................
_   TOTHEO -  [N] l  ___{I} _     EBE   G   ____ ETTERO
_   FTHESE__  [I] n  __-{S} -     UIN   G   ____ SONNET
_   SMrWha_-  [L] L __  [H]A     P <P> I__ [N]   ESSEA
_   NDthat____[E] T __  [E]R  _  N_<I> T___[I]   EPROM
_   ISEDB  Y O u   ___- [R]E     V <E> R _ [L]   IVING
_   POEtW  I s h  ____  [E]T  __ H [T] H__-[E]   WELLW
_   IShIN- G a ______ [d V e]    N [T] u ______ ReRINS
_   EtTIN  G fort----_________   H [T] t

__________         <= 19 =>
------------------------------------------------------------------
                CRATYLUS by Plato

<<[SOCRATES to Hermogenes]: *ARETe* will be the opposite of it,
signifying in the first place ease of motion, then that the stream
  Of the good soul is unimpeded, and has therefore the attribute
  of *EVER FLOWING* without let or hindrance, and is therefore
called *ARETe* , or, more correctly, aeireite (EVER-FLOWING),>>
--------------------------------------------------------
.        The [DUN]ciad. Book iv. Line 249.
.
Stuff the head with all such reading as was *NEVER READ*:
For thee explain a thing till all men doubt it,
And write about it, goddess, and about it.
-------------------------------------------------------------
________    *SUFFLAMINANDUS*
____    *DUN SUS NILE {FAMA} FRAT* -(ernitatis)
..............................................
*DUN* , n. [See DUNe.] A mound or small hill.
..............................................
*DUN* : 1. Annoy constantly.

2. Persistently ask for overdue payment;
"The grocer dunned his customers every day by telephone".

3. Cure by salting; "dun codfish".
...........................................................
*DUN* : One who importunes for payment of a bill (AS dunan
: to din or clamour). The tradition is that it refers
to Joe Dun, a famous bailiff of Lincoln in the reign of
Henry VII. The British Apollo says he was so active and
dexterous in collecting bad debts that when anyone became
"slow to pay" the neighbours used to say to the creditors,
"Dun him" (send Dun after him).

"An Universitie dunne ... is an inferior creditor of some
  ten shillings or downewards, contracted for horse-hire,
  or perchance drinke, too weake to be put in suite."
    - Bishop Earle: Microcosmographia (1601-1695).
..............................................
             Squire DUN:

The hangman between Richard Brandin & Jack Ketch.

"And presently a halter got,
  Made of the best strong hempen teer;
  And, ere a cat could lick his ear,
  Had tied him up with as much art,
  As Dun himself could do for's heart."

-  Cotton: Virgil Travestied, book iv.
-------------------------------------------
Moby-Dick (1851) by Herman Melville
CHAPTER 76 The Battering-Ram
.
So that when I shall hereafter detail to you all
the specialities and concentrations of potency
.
EVERywhe[R]e lur[K]ing i[N] this [E]xpan[S]ive m[O]nste[R];
.
when I shall show you some of his more inconsiderable braining
feats; I trust you will have renounced all ignorant incredulity,
and be ready to abide by this; that though the Sperm Whale stove
a passage through the Isthmus of Darien, and mixed the Atlantic
with the Pacific, you would not elevate one hair of your eye-brow.
For unless you own the whale, you are but a provincial and
sentimentalist in *TRUTH*. But clear *TRUTH* is a thing for
salamander giants only to encounter; how small the chances
for the provincials then? What befell the weakling youth
lifting the dread goddess's *VEIL* at Lais?
....................
__  <= 5 =>

.  E V E  R  y
.  w h e [R] e
.  l u r [K] i
.  n g i [N] t
.  h i s [E] x
.  p a n [S] i
.  v e m [O] n
.  s t e [R]

[ROSENKR] -5 {1 in 130}

(Smallest [ROSENKR] skip in KJV = -188)
-------------------------------------------
The Song of Hiawatha (1855)
~ 146,000 letters
..............................
"Why stand *IDLY* looking at us,
Leaning on the rock behind you?
Come and wrestle with the others,
Let us pitch the quoit togethe[R]!"
.
. Lazy [K]wasi[N]d mad[E] no an[S]wer,
.
T[O] thei[R] challenge made no answer,
Only *ROSE* , and slowly turning,
Seized the huge rock in his fingers,
Tore it from its *DEEP* foundation,
Poised it in the air a moment,
Pitched it sheer into the river,
Sheer into the *SWIFT* Pauwating,
Where it still is seen in Summer.
....................
__  <= 5 =>

. [R]!L a z y
. [K] w a s i
. [N] d m a d
. [E] n o a n
. [S] w e r,T
. [O] t h e i
. [R] c h a l
.  l  e n g e
.
[ROSENKR] -5 {1 in 820}
-----------------------------------
Art Neuendorffer
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages